-A cornerstone of the development of acute medicine has been the principle of consultant presence within the acute medical unit (AMU). There is the hypothesis that consultant supervision improves patient care. This view is not currently supported by firm scientific evidence. When Ipswich AMU opened in 2004, there was a consultant presence on some weekdays only. Admission data were collected and assessed with respect to the presence or absence of the consultant. Overall length of stay was significantly lower, by a mean of 1.3 days, when there was a consultant present, and 9% more patients were discharged on the same day of their assessment (95% confidence interval 5.7% to 12.6%, pϽ0.001) without affecting readmission or mortality. These results suggest the absence of a consultant leads to fewer same-day discharges and causes the inappropriate admission of patients not needing inpatient management. Further study is required to determine whether these findings are shared by other AMUs.
Cardiogenic shock (CS) with variable systemic inflammation may be responsible for patient heterogeneity and the exceedingly high mortality rate. Cardiovascular events have been associated with clonal haematopoiesis (CH) where specific gene mutations in haematopoietic stem cells lead to clonal expansion and the development of inflammation. This study aims to assess the prevalence of CH and its association with survival in a population of CS patients in a quaternary centre.
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